Test your knowledge with this medium Science quiz. This quiz includes questions about science players, records, and history. Each session picks 10 random questions from 30 total — try again for a new set!
10 random questions from 30 total • medium
Each session picks different questions!
Below is the full question bank for this quiz. Each session picks 10 questions at random, so you'll see a different set every time you play. Answers and explanations are included for study and review.
What is 12 × 15?
12 × 15 = 180.
What is 144 ÷ 12?
144 ÷ 12 = 12.
What is 25% of 200?
25% of 200 = 50.
What is 35 + 47?
35 + 47 = 82.
What is 90 - 37?
90 - 37 = 53.
What is 18 × 6?
18 × 6 = 108.
What is 225 ÷ 15?
225 ÷ 15 = 15.
What is 7²?
7² = 49.
What is 13 × 11?
13 × 11 = 143.
What is 156 ÷ 12?
156 ÷ 12 = 13.
What is 48 + 69?
48 + 69 = 117.
What is 1000 - 458?
1000 - 458 = 542.
What is 16 × 14?
16 × 14 = 224.
What is 289 ÷ 17?
289 ÷ 17 = 17.
What is 20% of 450?
20% of 450 = 90.
What is 9 × 8 + 10?
9 × 8 + 10 = 72 + 10 = 82.
What is (15 + 5) × 3?
(15 + 5) × 3 = 20 × 3 = 60.
What is 121 ÷ 11?
121 ÷ 11 = 11.
What is 24 × 9?
24 × 9 = 216.
What is 500 - 275?
500 - 275 = 225.
What is 17 × 12?
17 × 12 = 204.
What is 360 ÷ 18?
360 ÷ 18 = 20.
What is 3³?
3³ = 27.
What is 64 ÷ 0.5?
64 ÷ 0.5 = 128.
What is 45 × 4?
45 × 4 = 180.
What is 2³ + 3³?
8 + 27 = 35.
What is 999 - 321?
999 - 321 = 678.
What is 14 × 13?
14 × 13 = 182.
What is 81 ÷ 3 + 10?
81 ÷ 3 = 27; 27 + 10 = 37.
What is 150 × 2 - 75?
150 × 2 = 300; 300 - 75 = 225.
Mathematics is both the language of the universe and one of the most intimidating subjects for many people. But maths trivia is different from maths tests — it focuses on fascinating facts about numbers, famous mathematical discoveries, the stories behind theorems, and the surprising ways maths shows up in everyday life.
Our maths quiz covers numerical facts, geometrical concepts, famous mathematicians and their contributions, mathematical constants like pi and the golden ratio, and the kind of number facts that make you see the world differently. You do not need to be able to solve differential equations — you need to be curious about numbers.
Questions explore the history and beauty of mathematics in accessible ways: why do prime numbers matter, what is the largest number with a specific name, who invented calculus, and what is unique about the number zero? This quiz rewards the intellectually curious as much as the mathematically trained.
No. The quiz focuses on facts about mathematics, history, and numbers — not calculation ability.
Numbers, geometry, famous mathematicians, mathematical constants, and maths history.
Yes — it covers topics relevant to school-level maths in a trivia format.